6 Replies to “What’s In That Injection?”

  1. Well how about that.
    Anyway, you know that dogs can not operate a X-ray machine, but cats scan.
    What do you call an old snowman? A glass of water.

  2. I’ve had this injection, it depends on what they’re scanning for if they use it or not. I have hormone issues so they were scanning the pituitary. They did scans without, and with, gad.

    I have copies of those scans, and the difference is huge because the gad only penetrates certain parts of the pituitary which is exactly what they’re looking for. So it isn’t just about clarity, it’s about how it penetrates. Brighter spots means more blood flow, but they only have a small window to hit the right timing.

    It is flushed out by the kidneys and it’s chelated, so it is already bound in a way that causes the body to flush it out.

    Keep in mind the pituitary is about 10 mm and they’re looking for spots that are as small as 0.5mm.

    1. Yes, you have hormone issues. We’ve noticed.
      But thanks for contributing to the medical industrial complex.
      I wish your pituitary well, and hope you enjoy viewing your copy of the scans.
      The body flushes shite out is the miraculous point.
      Do you have a pedometer, too?

      1. “Yes, you have hormone issues. We’ve noticed.”

        The jokes just write themselves… 🙂

      2. If he does have a pedometer, the needle must be in the red zone. But I too hope his pituitary gland stays healthy, Why, without a pituitary gland, how could he spit?

  3. Trust. Nope. Never again. Question everything the medicine man says, especially “public health” crap.

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